Undertakers, rabbis join global fight promoting COVID shots

Caesar Thompson talks to participants in the Rapid Employment and Development Initiative, READI Chicago program, during Thompson's Q&A session on the COVID-19 vaccines Tuesday, Dec. 14, 2021, in Chicago. Thompson has spent the past several months in Chicago communities hard-hit by COVID-19, working with city public health authorities to boost vaccination rates. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)

FILE - Funeral parlor hearses drive in a convoy through Soweto, South Africa, Tuesday Dec. 7, 2021. Over 40 hearses took part in what was a COVID-19 vaccine awareness campaign, with the catchy slogan: "We not in a hurry to see you!" From South African undertakers to ultra-Orthodox Israeli rabbis, an unconventional cadre of people has joined global efforts to increase COVID-19 vaccination rates. Launching campaigns that traditionally have been the realm of public health authorities, they’re opening church doors, going door to door, village to village, touting the benefits of vaccination, sometimes making shots available on the spot. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay, File)

Health workers carry containers with COVID-19 vaccines during a door-to-door vaccination drive in Sativeti village, on the outskirts of Gauhati, India, Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2021. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath)

FILE - A Funeral Parlours Association member distributes a leaflet in Soweto, South Africa, Tuesday Dec. 7, 2021. Over 40 hearses took part in what was a COVID-19 vaccine awareness campaign, with the slogan: "We not in a hurry to see you!" (AP Photo/Jerome Delay, File)

Health workers try to convince elderly people to receive the vaccine for COVID-19 during a door-to-door vaccination drive in Ouguri village, on the outskirts of Gauhati, India, Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2021. From South African undertakers to ultra-Orthodox Israeli rabbis, an unconventional cadre of people has joined global efforts to increase COVID-19 vaccination rates. Launching campaigns that traditionally have been the realm of public health authorities, they’re opening church doors, going door to door, village to village, touting the benefits of vaccination, sometimes making shots available on the spot. (AP Photo/Anupam Nath)

A doctor gives a man a vaccination against coronavirus inside the St. Petri church in Chemnitz, Germany, on Dec. 12. From South African undertakers to ultra-Orthodox Israeli rabbis, an unconventional cadre of people has joined global efforts to increase COVID-19 vaccination rates. Launching campaigns that traditionally have been the realm of public health authorities, they’re opening church doors, going door to door, village to village, touting the benefits of vaccination, sometimes making shots available on the spot. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

In Germany, Lutheran pastors are offering COVID-19 shots inside churches. In Israel’s science-skeptical ultra-Orthodox community, trusted rabbis are trying to change minds. And in South Africa, undertakers are taking to the streets to spread the word.